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Revision as of 11:48, 21 July 2023

Syneilesis hayatae
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Syneilesis
Species:
S. intermedia
Binomial name
Syneilesis intermedia
(Hayata) Kitam., 1937

Syneilesis intermedia (Hayata) Kitam is one of two endemic plants in genus Syneilesis of Taiwan (the other being Syneilesis subglabrata Yamamoto & Sasaki Kitam, with common name Alpine Syneilesis), it is also known as Taiwan Rabbit Umbrella. Compared to the relatively stable population of Alpine Syneilesis, this species was once thought to be extinct due to the lack of collection records for over half a century after World War II. It was until 2008 that the species was rediscovered to still exist in the lowland grasslands of Miaoli. Due to its small population size, the species was listed as “Critically Endangered (CR)” in the “Red List of Taiwan Vascular Plants, 2017.”

Description

Medium to large herbaceous plants that can reach a height of 80 to 160 cm, the plant is glabrous throughout. The leaves are subcoriaceous and gradually elongate from the base of the plant to the upper internodes. The leaves near the base are peltate-ovate, approximately 35 cm in diameter, with long petioles and peltate-shaped attachments. The lamina is palmately deep-lobed, resembling an upright umbrella on the ground. The lobes are generally 5 to 9 in number and are bifid (once or twice) with apex acute and irregularly incised serrations along the leaf margin. The cauline leaves on the upper part of the plant are smaller in size, with shorter petioles, narrower lamina, and less obvious leaf lobes. The inflorescences are light pink and corymbose on the inflorescence axis. A single-head flower is composed of about 14 to 16 tubular flowers, surrounded by two whorls of involucral bracts. The corolla of a single flower is five-lobed and white, with a pedicel 5 to 16 mm in length.[1]

This species, along with another endemic plant of Taiwan, Alpine Syneilesis (scientific name: Syneilesis subglabrata (Yamam. & Sasaki) Kitam.), are in the same genus. They can be effectively distinguished by their geographical distribution, inflorescence, and leaf lobe morphology. Syneilesis intermedia is only distributed in the lowland grasslands of Miaoli, with robust plants and corymbose head flowers and shallower serrations along the leaf margin (approaching serrated margins). Alpine Syneilesis is endemic to the mountainous regions of central Taiwan, found under the forest canopy at an altitude of 1200 to 2800 meters. The plant is slender, the flower heads are arranged conically, and the serrations along the leaf margin are deeper (approaching lobes).[1][2]

Distribution and habitat

The Syneilesis genus (scientific name: Syneilesis Maxim.) is a group of Asteraceae species endemic to East Asia. There are 6 known species worldwide[3], with two species in Taiwan, both of which are endemic to Taiwan. Among them, Syneilesis intermedia is limited to open grasslands at altitudes of 300 to 500 meters in Miaoli, mostly located in lowland hills or cemeteries[1][3].

Taxonomy

Discovery and early taxonomy

Taiwan Syneilesis was first collected by a French missionary, Urbain Jean Faurie) in 1903 from “Bioritsu,” which is present-day Miaoli[3]. The specimen was cited by Bunzo Hayata in 1906 and was published as a new species, Senecio intermedius Hayata[2]. It was later reclassified under Cacalia genus as Cacalia intermedius (Hayata) Hayata[4]. It was not until 1937 that the species was reclassified by Shiro Kitamura as Syneilesis intermedia (Hayata) Kitam., and this classification is still in use now.

Collection records for this species have always been scarce. Only 3 specimens were known during the Japanese occupation period. They were collected by Takiya Kawakami and Syuniti Sasaki, Yaichi Shimada, and Tokio Suzuki, in 1911, 1923, and 1940, respectively, all from Tongxiao, Miaoli[3]. After World War II, no new collection records were added up until the publication of the Asteraceae chapter of the second edition of “Flora of Taiwan” in 1998[1][3]. Ching-Yi Peng et al. noted that the species has been“not collected for more than 70 years, possibly extinct”[1].

Rediscovery

In 2008, an ecological observer, Mr. Chih-Chung Tsai, accidentally discovered a wild population of Taiwan Syneilesis while investigating plants of the Grewia genus (scientific name: Grewia L.) in Miaoli. The distribution range was approximately 50 to 100 square meters. It was confirmed that this species still exists in Taiwan and is coexisting with Echinops grijsii hance, Aster shimadae (Kitam.) Nemoto, Prunus pogonostyla Maxim., Styrax matsumurae Perkins, Bupleurum kaoi T.S.Liu, C.Y.Chao & T.I.Chuang, and other rare species[5][6]. The “Red List of Vascular Plants in Taiwan, 2017” listed the species as “Critically Endangered (CR)” based on the fact that the population is occupying an area of less than 10 square km, has only one habitat, with fewer than 50 mature individuals[7]

Controversies

Since its rediscovery in 2008, the original habitat has become one of the key destinations for plant enthusiasts, which also resulted in controversies. It was suspected that the species were subjected to a large-scale excavation and over-collection in 2010. The process also has a negative impact on the Echinops population that’s nearby[6]

Reference

  1. ^ a b c d e Peng, C.-I; Chung, K.-F.; Li, H.-L. (1998). Syneilesis Maxim. in Flora of Taiwan ed. 2. vol. 4. Taipei, Taiwan. pp. 1075–1077.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ a b Hayata, B. (1906). "Enumeratio Plantarurn In Insula Formosa sponte crescentium hucusque rite cognitarum adjectis descriptionibus et figuris Specierum pro regione novarum". Journal of the College of Science, Imperial University of Tokyo. 22: 208.
  3. ^ a b c d e 廖, 俊奎; 李, 權裕; 洪, 國翔 (2019). "野兔專用:台灣破傘菊". 科學人知識庫 (207).
  4. ^ Hayata, B. (1918). Cacalia LINN. in Icones Plantarum Formosanarum vol. 8. p. 66.
  5. ^ 蔡, 志忠 (2010). "消失七十年的台灣破傘菊再現記". 生態臺灣 (26): 54-57.
  6. ^ a b 蔡, 志忠 (2010). "失落的植物─台彎破傘菊". 生態臺灣 (27): 62-67.
  7. ^ 2017臺灣維管束植物紅皮書名錄 (PDF).